Newspaper Page Text
THE
TRIBUNE.
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF RABUN COUNTY iAND NORTH EAST GEORGIA.
VOL. II.
CLAYTON. RABUN CO.. GA.,
ADAM'S ALE | FROM EXCHANOES
It m related of the late Emery Young Harrir Newb
Stun that when sitting urouud a' We believe in helping the sick
wrine table with a number of legal and need}' and think everybody
friends he insisted on drinking ice »hould look after their welfare,
water. They taunted him for his But we do not believe that there is
abstemiousness saying: "‘Whatis any charity orchristianity in help-
there fn water! You can say noth- ’ ing people who enjoy good health
for It.” Picking up his glass, 1 aod the only ret son that they have
he pronounced the following culo- for being in destitute circumstances
gyon water: “How do you ex-! is pride and idleness. If they are
pact to improve upon the beverage j not too lazy to wont they are too
furnished by nature? Here it is. proud, and if they cannot find
—Adam’s Ale—about the only gift J something they call nice they wont
that has decended undefiled from do anything. We have no patience
the (harden of Eden! Nature’s!or bread ~f6r this class and hope to
common carrier, not created in the see the time when such people will
rottenness of fermentation, not dis- have to go to work. We don’t
tilled over guilty fires 1 Virtues J blame people who can afiord to
and hot vices are its companions, spgnd their time as they please,
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 14. 1899.
NO. 34.
Does it cause drunkenness, disease,
death, cruelty to women and child
ren? Will it A placc rags on the
person, mortgages on the stock,
form and furniture? Will it con
sume wages and income in advance
iifnd ruin mcr in business? No!
but it floats in white gossamer
clouds far up in the quiet summer
•ky, and hovep* in dreuiny mist
dverjhe merry faces of all our
sparkling hikes. It veils the woods
Apd hills of earth’s landscapes in
jpurple haze, where filmy lights and
' and shadows drift hour after hour.
It piles it self in t umbled in asses,
"croud doilies niiatliunder heads,
draws the electric flash front its
mysterious hiding places, ‘and
■MCaias ami shocks the wide air with
vivid tines of fire. It i» carried by
the winds, and falls in rustling cur
tain* of liquid drapery ull over the
■ thirsty .waods^tnd fields, and fixes
Ood's mystic eastern heavens his
^beautiful bow of promise, glorified
with a radiance that seeing reflect
ed out of heaven itself. It gleams
itTtbe frost crystals of the moun
tain tops and the dews of the val
leys. It silently creeps up to each
leaf in the myriad forests of the
wprld and tints each fruit nnd
flower. It is here in the grass blades
of the meadows, and there where
but we have too many gentlemen
and Indies and a full crop of boys
that ate coming on in the same
steps that do not work as thev'
should.
Clarksville Advebtiseu
Rev. James F. West, of Mossy
Crepk district, was elected Repre
sentative of White county last
Wednesday,xo fill the unexpired
term of lion. Watson Fain, de
ceased. Mr; West was opposed by
Messers. Benton West. J.II, Luma
den. and Fain, a son of lion
son Fuin. but was eiusji
Uapt. S. II. Mosely. otVToccon.
died at his home ihere Sunday af
ternoon. Capt. Mosely was one of
the most prominent men in the
county, llu«hnd been u man ac
tive in public 3 affairs and was a
powerful factor in building up Toc-
coa city . He! leaves a wife and
several children. The funeral took
place Sunday afternoon.
The religion that makes people
pay their debts; the religion that
keeps people from speaking ill of
their neighbors; the religion that
makes no distinction between
wealth and poverty; the religion
that is needed in the world to day.
—Ex.
First Physician : ‘ft tms a case
that demands a consultation?”
Second Physician: “I think it
is.The patient is extremely rich.”
t^poorn waves its tassels and the j|, e people’s every day life, exempli
wheat is billowing 1 It gems the ■ fj et | ; n hind deeds, loving acts, cheer
dfjptha *f the desert with the glad ^ j n g wor( j 8 j g tlm Kind of religion
oasis, winds in oceans around the
whole earth, and roars its hoarse
eternal anthems on a hundred
thousand miles of coast 1 It cl isps
its’hands in the flushing wave-
qrests of the sea. laughs in the lit
tle rapids of the brooks, kisses the
dripping moss covered old oaken
Wfll bucket ill a countless host of
- happy homes! “See these pieces
of crapkod ice, full of prismatic
enters* olear as diamonds 1 Listen
^tttjktwir fairy tinkle against the
timming glass,that sweetest music
^all the wprld to oue halt faint-
with thirst! And so in the
t of that grand old man,
fs. ask you brothers all,
|d You exchange that sparkling
of water for alcohol, the
iflf the yery devil himself?”
. The finest quality of loat sugar
is used in the manufacture of Chain
bcrlutn'8 cough remedy and the
roots used in its preparation give it
a flavor similar to that of maple
svrup, making it very pleasant to
take. As a medicine for the cure' 8 tm work.
TEN NEW AND ORIGINAL SONOS
WHICH CAN BE HaI FREE
What will the great metropolitan
papers do next? Thi6 Is the ques
tion some one asks nearly every
day. But there is one which leads
ail others. It has guineffl the sobri
quet of “America’s Greatest News
paper” by just such remarkable
pieces of enterprise ail the one
which has just now attracted the
attention of the press nil over the
country.
Last week the New York Sun
day World announced that itWdtttd
give away an album of pew and
original music, consistingT>f,.ten of
the up-to-date class of that
are now so popular, suClxos songs
of sentiment, “coon” son^^^cake
walks,”&c. These ten sings''the
Sunday World proposes to distrib
ute one each week, with e^jary copy
of tlie Sunday World. ^Vhgn it
is considered that the average price
of new music, written aridfeompns-
ed by poptilar authors, is, from 00
to 45 cents, the*ftnparallel ! ed enter
prise of the \V« rid in. giying the
the song away with a big Sunday
newspaper,“lor which OftlY 6 cents
is charged is apparent,
requests.that, we'-:,,
announcement J|
World wifi issue weekly*]
sli'Hit music form,- .with liundsome
colored cover. The entire bet will
be muiled, postage paid, for 50c.
Remittances received after Sept. 8
will get the back numbers and each
newmimbexEftsued. Besides the
srng, The World will aUo send its
colored Art Portfolio, which is a
marvel of Minimalism; its Sunday
Magazine, which equals the month
ly periodicals, and its Comic Week
ly, which excels every comic week
ly in the United States except two,
and in its comic scope equals these
two 10-cent publications.
Write a postal card to the Sun
day World Music Editor, Pulitzer
thut man manly and woman wo-v > - —•
manly; the religion that is part Building, N. Y., for u list of the
songs.
WOLFF; MK
Hot and dry, but have some prospects
of a shower.
The-men and boys are busy engaged
in saving fodder and melons and onr
good housewives and daughters are busy
picking, pickling and drying beans.
Mr John Keener, who spent the sum
mer with relatives in Alabama, is at
home again.
We missed J. M. Bleckley at Sunday
School Sunday.
Mr Uockaway Keener gives a quilting
tomorrow.
Uucle Rufus Keener
eighty years old and sa>8 be has
never taken any medicine and le can
Hark Twain on Jews.
The Jew is not a disturber of the
peace of any country. Even his
enemies will concede that. He is
not a loafer, he is not a sot, he is
not noisy, he is not a brawler nor
a rioiter, he is not quarrelsome.
In the statistics of crime his pres
ence is conspicuously rare—in all
countries. With murder and o-
ther crimes of violence he has but
little to do; he is a stranger to the
hangman. In the police court’s
daily long roll o f “assaults” and
“drunk and disorderlies” his name
seldom appears. That the Jewish
home is a home in the truest sense
isa fact which no one will dispute.
The family is knitted together by
the strongest affections! it’s mem
bers show each other every due re
spect; and reverence for the elders
is an inviolate law of the house.
The Jew is not a burden on the
charities of the state nor of the cit-
yi those could cease from tbeir
factions without affecting him.
When he is well, he works; when
he is incapacitated, his own people
take care ot him. And not in a
poor and stingy way, but with a
fine and large benevolence. His
rifttu.'ib entiled to be called the
most benevolent of all tho races of
may exist, but there are few men
that can fkxy they have seen that
spectacle. The je,v lias been
staged in many uncomplimentary
forms, but. so far as I know, no
dramatist has done him the injus
tice to stage him as a beggar.
Whenever a Jew has real need to
beg, his people save him from the
pecessity of doing it. The charit
able institutions of tho Jews are
Supported by Jewish money, and
amply. The jews make no tuss
about it; it is done quietly; they do
not nag and pester and harass us
for contributions; they give us
peace, and tet us an example—an
example wlft:h we have not found
ourselves able to follow.—Mark
Twain in Harper’s Bazar.
Janies l’endergrass returned from I-a-
vouia Monday.
Miss Lnla Justus has gone home.
THE MAN WHO SUCCEEDS 1
The man who makes a success of an 1
important venture never waits for the*
crowd. He strikes out for himself. It,
It is not a*ways the best to wait
until it is needed before buying a
bottle of Chamberlain’s colic, chol
era and dinrrhoeh remedy. Quite
fiequently the remedy is required
in the very busiest season or in the
night and much inconvenience and
suffering must ho borne before it
can be obtained. It costs but a
trifle as compared with-it«j#eiil
worth and every family can well
, afford to Keep it in their home. It
is everywhere acknowledged to he
the most successful medicine in the
world for bowel complaints . For
sale by J.L. Hamby.
i mdf-denialr. little honest*
of
of coughs, cold, lagrippe. croup |
and whooping cough it is une
qualed by auv other. It always
cures, and cures quicxly. For sale
By J.L. Hamby.
I A young man in one of our dec*
ric cars observed that a Young takes nerve. It takes a great lot of grit,
lady sitting opposite was looking B ut the man who succeeds has both, j wife looks like a bag of noil with
at him very intently, and thinking !* n y° nec ™k u - The public admires ,# string around her center; where
.. .. i _i_w* L—.. ! * J ...” the man who lias enough confidence in! the husband has a tobacoo pano
rama painted on bis shirt front,
“What is home without a news
paper?” asked one exchange, to
to which another replies : “li is
a place where old huts are stuffed
into broken windows; where the
Program for Rabun Conaty Teach-
«n Anooiatioi to be kali at
Clayton Oot. 7th. 1809.
1 10 a.m. Association opened
by devotional exercise,
2 Address of welcome.—W.T.
Daniel.
8 Reading of minutes of last
meeting.
4 Teaching reading. — C, J.
Crunkleton and Nin Ramey.
5 Essay—Rabun County’s Pub
lic School.—Miss Mandu Earl.
0 Recitation—Miss Lena Bleck
ley.
7 Writing—L.M. Chastain and
M.S. Moore.
8 Personal habits of teacher—J,
M. Bleckley.
Afternoon.
9 lp.m. Conducting recita
tion—Miss Ruth Smith, j, Virgil
McCrackin and Claude Green.
10 Recitation — Miss Belle
York.
11 Art of questioning—W, T.
Daniel.
12 How to interest pupils in
map-drawing—W.S. Dickson and
F.D. Singleton.
18 Recitation — Miss Sibbie
Bynum.
or" hinder each other—Oscar Powell
and James Green.
15 Inter-relation of parent and
teacher—A. A. O’Kelley, R, N.
Dover and Garnett Williams.
16 Essay—Value of a teachers
association—Miss Susie Ramey.
17 School lawR of Georgia aud
progress of the schools of Rabun
county—W.J. Neville, C.S.C.
Miss Texie York, ( Committee
W. T. Daniel, < on
Frank Singleton. ( Program.
Boys have always been boys.
There is no doubt that Shem aud
Ham pitched coppers or played
jackstraws on the shady side of tho
ark. whilo Noah , who couldn’t find
them, had to feed the stock him-
selt, or that David held up two fin
gers to Jonothan when he saw him
across the block and that they
therewith went in swimming in
the Jordan against the express pro
hibition of their mothers.—Minne
apolis Journal.
A Miss Clara Lord waft married
to Mr. Isacc Helpim out in Kan
sas last wcok, and the cruel head
line joker of the local paper put -in
an account of the marriage under a
big scare head which read “Lord-
Helpim.”—Ex.
The man,who thinks little is apt
to talk much.
80 YEAR**
EXPERIENCE
Patents
sympayhxt> flight have impressed her himie|f tc Uk „ # chan ^. These chanc-1
nameless ecU of kind- favorably changed hu seat to one es are tbe main things after all. The; ... , . ....
Victoria* over fev- by her aide end said, “Haven’t 1 ’ man who triee to succeed must expect, nnd the neglected children wipe
seen you somewhere?" “Well,.’.’ to be criticised. Nothing , important, their nosea on thair jacket sleeve.”
she re pliedI am not quite cer- **» «*«* <*«"• «# greate* Humber ,
iolQ, but I tbiuk you .« flw tt.0 Tl * ™-
(hot Mote our upooot." He left of»bet SHkWiZi jl-j i' 11 ? ‘ I “»* I* l h «
the car *t once,—Kx. r ‘dofce.-C. V. White. j made from elephants tuB*s,
are the
of gold which, when
er, gtuun out so
i the pattern of life that
.—Canon Farrar.